MORNIN Gr ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1913. Unequal to It. "Never mind, old man. out right In the long run." "In the long 'run, yes, but I'm only trained for a sprint" Chicago News. local carers Mrs. T. H. Davies, of Echo, was a county seat visitor Wednesday., Ondfrev. of Portland. was a local visitor Wednesday. Miss Ella White is reported to be recovering from a selge of Illness. Mrs. Will Watts was in Oregon City Wednesday, visiting her daugh tre. Miss Mary Hart, of Salem, was vis iting friends in Oregon City Wednes day. Miss Scho Spence will leave for her home at the close of the school term. Clarence L. Eaton, of this city, was in Salem on legal business early in the week. Miss Nella Dewitt, of Portland, was calling on Oregon City friends Wed nesday. Henry Weston, of Chehalis, Wash., was in Oregon City the early part of the week. W. A. Hessian, of Portland, was a county seat visitor the early part of the week. Mrs. Louise Gibbs, of Milwaukie, was visiting with her grandmother here Wednesday. Miss Gladys Fernald, of Portland, was visiting friends in the county seat Wednesday. Mrs. Ada Hughes, of Salem, is vis iting relatives here, and after a short oti will ca rt T.ohnnnn Mts. Edna Miller and son have gone to Hillsboro to . spend several weeks with Mrs. L. M. Hoyt. Miss Helen Ely has gone to Grants Pass to spend several weeks as the guest of her grandfather, I. D. Cole. Mrs. Roy Wilkinson, of Vancouver, Wash., was visiting her mother, Mrs. John Chambers, In this city Wednes day. Miss. Hazel" Mills has returned to her home in Sandy after an extsnded visit with her sister, Miss Mabal Mills, of Sandy. Herman Metzger, a well-known hide and wool buyer of Portland, was in the county seat Wednesday, look ing over prospects. Miss Coulsen was in charge of the box social given at the Baptist church this week, and reports that the affair was a success in every way. Mr. and Mlrs. F. L. Rau, and Leslie Rau, of Wisconsin arrised in Glad stone Wednesday, and will spend the summer as the guests of Irving Rau. H. J. Bigger has let the contract for the construction of two green houses on property at Third and Cen ter streets which he purchased some time ago. Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Gaston, of Seattle, were calling on Clackamas county friends Wednesday, having motored down to Portland to attend the Rose Festival. Nothing is more disagreeable than ACTTia nr nthr skin rHapanps Tt is also dangerous unless speedily check ed. Meritol Eczema Remedy will af ford instant relief and permanent re sults. We have never seen a remedy that compares with it. Jones Drug Co. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Taber were in town Wednesday, and expect to leave soon for Cannon Beach, where they will make extensive improvements in their notel for the coming season. Hen'hatched chicks are early vic tims of head-lice. Conkey's Head Lice Ointment is sure death to these pests and doesn't Injure the chicks. Enough in one tube to save 100 chicks. 10c, 25c. For sale in Oregon City by the Oregon Commis sion Co. The ladies of the Presbyterian church will give a market and apron sale Saturday, June 7th, in the P. R., L. & P. department of the Beaver building. Sandwiches and coffee and ice cream and cake will be served. . A party of Portland high school students made a launch trip to Ore gon City Wednesday, spent an hour or so here looking around, and after patronizing local refreshment par lors, departed for their homes. To the People of Oregon City We wish to again call your atten tion to the fact that we are sole agents in this city for Meritol Pile Remedy. Our success with this rem edy has far exceeded our most san guine expectations. Therefore, we are pleased to recommend and guar antee evry package of Meritol Pile Remedy. Jones Drug Co. WARNING! Since . its introduction into the United States, the sales of Parisian Sage have been phenomenal. This Look out for them, get the genuine. See that the girl with the Auburn hair is on every package. Parisian Sage is the quickest act ing and most efficient hair tonic in the world. It is made to conform to Dr. San gerbond's (of Paris) proven theory that dandruff, falling hair, baldness and scalp itch are caused by germs. Parisian Sage kiils these dandruff germs and removes all trace of dand ruff in two weeks, or monye back; it stops 'falling hair and itching scalp and prevents baldness. And remember baldness is cause 1 by dandruff germs, those little hard working, persistent devils .that da7 and night do nothing but dig into the roots of the hair and destroy its vi tality. ' Parisian Sage is a daintily perfum ed hair dressing; not sticky or greasy and any woman who desires luxuriant and bewitching hair can get it in two weeks by using Parisian Sage. aO cents a large bottle at Huntley Bros., and druggists everywhere. i . It'll all come A MOCK ELOPEMENT By MARTHA BILLINGS Jim Dunlap was a hardworking farmer boy.' His father died when Jim was very young, and the boy was obliged to scratch early for a living. He worked hard and studied nights, for there was ambition In Jim, though no one would have suspected It. Nev ertheless he seemed content with hard work and not Inclined to take a stand above mediocrity. May Stanley was the belle of the village. The moment Jim Dunlap saw her he fell in love with her. Now, while Jim Dunlap was a plod der, with nothing brilliant whatever about him. May was a little witch. She was witty, droll and much inclined to mischief. Her face was a mirror for her thoughts. Nevertheless if she bad a preference for any of the young men of the village there were no newcom ers none of her friends could discover it But a girl, be she ever so commu nicative on other subjects, may keep that one secret deep hidden in her breast As has been said, there was one young man with whom , she was never associated in the minds of her friends. That was Jim Dunlap. In deed, she had been heard to very un feelingly apply to him the name of "sorrel top." While Jim was plowing by day and a student by night, a gangling, awk ward man of twenty, Walter Swift, the son. of a neighboring well to do farmer, was getting ready to leave college with a degree. He came home with a good deal of eclat, with a fra ternity badge on bis chest and a repu tation for scholarship. The girls look ed for him to take an Interest in May Stanley as the only one of their num ber capable of attracting one who had a university cut about him and more citified manners than any of the rest But some of them declared that he wouldn't look at May even. These lat ter he disappointed by not only look ing at her, but looking at her with longing eyes. There was that in her that attracted both sexes a reckless, belter skelter, devil-may-care way she bad, which is always fascinating in young persons, especially to young per sons.' Swift's appearance fresh from col lege tended to put Jim Dunlap by com parison only further in the background. His Joints seemed larger, his hair red der, while his freckles seemed like brown autumn leaves that some one had tramped all over his face. Not that he appeared to feel any inferior ity, for he plodded on in the same awk ward way as before. It was rather a feeling in those who saw the two young men in contrast That winter after Swift's coming home was a gay one among the young er set of the village. It isn't every small town that can number a full fledged college graduate among its so cial attractions, and Swift, who had played his share of pranks while at the university, originated a good many methods of amusement When the winter was drawing to a close and Lent was coming on the boys and girls were wondering what they would do by way of a carnival. .One of their number suggested that they have a fancy dress ball, but they had had one the year before and wanted something newer. Swift came to the rescue by proposing an elopement "An elopement!" all exclaimed at once. "What do you mean by that?" "In colonial times," he said, "when a couple were married it waa the custom for the bride and groom to race with the guests for a tavern, the party reaching the goal last to pay for a sup per. I propose that we select a couple to elope (for fun. of course) and run for the Beaver inn, the rest to follow, the supper to be paid for as In colonial times." The Idea was accepted with enthu siasm. May Stanley waa Just the girl to play the part of the bride, and the proposer of the scheme was the man for the groom May was chosen, but Swift was not While be waa the ad miration of the girls, the boys were in clined to be Jealous of him. But the boys couldn't Bettle upon one of their own number each desiring to be the eloper till some one in Jest nominated Dunlap. All laughingly assented, and it was considered that there would be more fun with him for groom than any of the others. He would make the af fair more ridiculous. Tuesday night before the opening of Lent Jim saddled two horses, one with a woman's saddle, and at 10 o'clock pulled up under May Stanley's win dow She jumped down Into bis arms. be put her on one of the horses, and away they galloped. At the same hour and minute the rest of the party started from an equi distant point, both making for the Beaver inn. Jim and May stopped for twelve minutes by the way: but, hav ing been given the advantage of the best road and Jim making a cut across fields, the elopers arrived first "My friends." said Jim. "I'll pay for the supper, for this is the happiest night of my life May and 1 stopped by the way at a parson's just long enough to be married." s No one considered his words in' ear nest and all set up a shout, but May produced a certificate that was passed around among the girls, and at last it began to be understood that the pair were married. "For heaven's sake, where and when did they do their courting?" was the universal question. Jim Dunlap is now a judge on the bench. . The Cut and Dried Life. We are born into a world that la an Inexhaustible store of ready, made ideas, stored up in tradition, in books and In every medium of communication be tween our minds and others. All we have to do-is to accept this predigested nourishment and ask no questions. We could live a whole life without ever making a really individual response, without providing ourselves, out of oar own experience, with any of the ma terial that our minds work on. Many, of us seem to be just this kind of spir itual parasites Atlantic Monthly. Accepted. HeWould you take a dare? She Well er--er this is so sudden. New York Sun. - ....... . POLO GAMES -COSTS1L000,000 English and American Teams to Meet In dune. TWO YEARS GETTING READY Most Brilliant and Dangerous of Pas . times Britishers Have Brought Over Unusually Good Ponies Americans Have Slight Advantage. The American and English polo teams are ready for their Internationa clash at Westbury, N. J., June 10 and 14. When the four Yankees and four Englishmen canter on the field to play for the world's championship the 30, 000 spectators will be entertained and thrilled by the most expensive game ever aranged in the history of modern sport For the match, in which eight men will take part four Americans and four Englishmen 11,000,000 has been spent, or at least will be before the games are over. Both countries have been getting ready for two years. This is a terrific cost for games that last only an hour, but the men who know polo say it is worth It To them polo is the greatest game In the world. It is the most brilliant and dangerous of pastimes. It has electrical changes, as has baseball. It requires unison of eye, brain and hand to a degree that no other game knows. It requires, too, a combination of working between horses and man as can be attained only by long continued training. The game Is spectacular in the extreme. The fight will change in a few seconds from one end of the field to the other. A single drive may change the whole complexion -of the play, and all the time there is the possibility of a spill that means broken limbs or death. There is no place In polo for a man or pony . that has not the stoutest of hearts and the strongest of muscles. The United States team is ready to meet the Englishmen, and as the lat ter say they have this year corralled al) the finest ponies in England, Ire land. Egypt and India If they lose again' they will not be able to say this time that it was owing to the lack of good mounts. There is no doubt that two years ago the Americans had the faster animals. There was little to choose between the two teams. The Englishmen excelled in the technique of riding and were gentler with their ponies, their riding being in marked contrast to the loose seats of the American players. Team work was marvelously good on each side, but the Meadowbrook four excelled in lining out for passing the ball. The American team and Its substi tutes aye as follows; Harry P. Whitney, captain; Dev- weux Milburn, Lawrence .W. Water- (oury and J. M. Waterbury, Jr. The substitutes are R. L. Agassiz, Joshua Crane, J. S. Phipps, L. E. Stoddard, C. C. Rumsey, Malcolm Stevenson and R. Montague. Mr. Whitney, Mr. Milburn and the two - Waterburys formed the winning four two years ago. The British team will be selected from aiyng these players: Captain Leslie Si C. Cheape, Captain R. G. Ritson. Captain G. E. Bellville, F. M. Freaks. Noel Edwards, Vivian Lockett and Lor-Ji Wodehouse. Captain Cheape and f!aitain Edwards were on the vis iting iam in 191L t Tlu Dig four Whitney, Milburn and the two Waterburys are great polo plaj-ef-s. They occupy not only the highest rank in the handicaps in Amer ica a ad in England, but they have been putytng' so long as a team that they know and understand each other's play perfectly. This is a big asset and is the real strength of a team. If a new member as introduced In a team it would take uonths of practice to attain the knowl edge of just how the other poloiata play the game. The members of the big four are never tied up with the red tape of team play, but each player knows Just how his mate plays. This often enables the team as a whole to score a victory. The American cup defenders will have a big advantage over the English team, as the challengers for the cup have never played together as a team. Individually the English poloists are much better poloists than the team that came over here in 1911. Captains Edwards and Cheape were members of the 1911 team and have played to gether. They understand each other's system of play. The English team received a terrific blow when Captain Buckmaster an nounced he would not be able to ac company the team to America. Buck- master is considered the best poloist in England. Captain Ritson. who has re- ; placed him, Is a crack player, and some experts consider him the equal of Buckmaster. Captain Vivian Lockett the newest member of the team, is a clever player. but is not in the same class with the other three. - A few weeks' practice is scarcely suf- 1 ficient for a team to co-ordinate in tricks of the game. -There are many angles and curves to polo, but the chief essentia I Is to hit the ball, but if "di rection" Is missing- hitting the ball is merely so much waste effort Antici pating a play enables a poloist to checkmate his opponent's effort to se cure a goal and to obtain the ball and make the most of his advantage. Ivory Mats. There are but three mats of Ivory In existence. The largest one measures 8 by 4 feet, and, although made in the north of India, has a Greek design for a border. It is used only on. state oc casions, like the signing of important state documents. The cost of this pre cious mat was almost incalculable, for more than 6,400 pounds of pure ivory were used or wasted in its construc tion. Only the finest and most flexible strips of the material could be used, and the mat is like the finest woven fabric. , Big Tin Producers. Bolivia is the world's second largest producer of tin. the main supply corn lag from the Malay straits. , l 'l"l"l"t"I"I""I"I"I"I"I"I H-l'H'l I' l l II NAP RUCKER A BARGAIN. I! HE. COST ONLY 500. ! Nap Rucker: who Is pronounced the best left handed pitcher in the National league, probably draws the top salary from the '. I Brooklyn club, yet bis release cost only $500. Pat Donovan, '. managing the Dodgers in 1906, ; saw Rucker pitch for Augusta '. ! that year and tabbed him. Pres- ident Ebbets attended the draft '. '. ing meeting in the fall and learn- ed that Rucker was bound by a '. '. contract to be Bold to Connie ; Mack. But as Mack had put up '. '. no money to bind the bargain the ' national commission annulled the . . : contract Then Ebbets slipped " In a draft for $500 on the spot. .. being the only major league magnate except Garry Herr- mann at the meeting, and Ruck ; er was awarded to him. All major league magnates have at- tended the draft meetings since then. t-M-M-M-M I M-l-M'i'M-1 ! i 1-1 i K0LEHMAINEN A WONDER. Finnish Runntr Holds Many Record, la a Vegetarian. Proud possessor of fifteen American distance records, two world's marks and credited with the best Olympic games performance for 10,000 meters, there is only one thing left for Hannes Kolehmainen to accomplish before we shall hall him as the greatest runner that ever wore a spiked shoe. And that is the surpassing of Alfred Shrubb's best times for the distances ranging from three to ten miles. Athletic enthusiasts who have seen the foreigner in action believe he is Photo ty American Press Association. HANNES KOUEHXAINEN. the only person - on earth who can lower Shrubb's world's records. The time Is not far distant when he will get a chance to do this. He is a better runner outdoors than behind closed doors. There is no ques tion about that 'He never ran on a board floor until last winter. It's no wonder he's a world's cham pion, say 'all the athletic experts. Kolehmainen's system of massage has been written of at length. Sufficient to say now that the same faithful rub ber who looked to' his wants during the Olympic games in Stockholm is living in Brooklyn. N. Y., with Hannes. He is paid not a cent and never was. His always has been a labor of love. When Hannes 'decided to come to America last fall his attendant said, "I will go also and get a job." And bo it hap pened. . . - Hannes Kolehmainen, his' brother Willie, the world's professional dis tance champion, and the attendant live in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn, N. Y. They cook their own meals, preparing every morsel that they take with as much care as does Oscar of Waldorf-Astoria fame. Hannes Koleh mainen eats no meat He specializes on fish and oatmeal, with plenty of vegetables as a "filler." The greatest amateur runner in the world .eliminat ed meat from his diet more than a year ago and declares that since he took this step he has been a better man in every respect. Six o'clock in. the morning is the hour that starts Kolehmainen to train ing. He hops out of bed and after taking half a dozen long breaths gets into his clothes for a bit of a walk. Hannes tries to walk two hours before breakfast every morning. Sometimes his work interferes, but it's safe to assert that he gets two hours' leg ex ercise before breakfast three days out of four. When he returns from the walk Kolhmnineri gets a light rub, aft er which he puts away Jl breakfast that would kill nn ordinary man. A Smooth Villain. "Before we were married." she com plained, vyou always engaged a cab when you took me anywhere. Now you think the street car is good enough for me." - "No, my darling. I don't think the street car is good enough for you. It's because I'm so proud of you. In a cab you would be seen by nobody, while 1 can show you off to so many people by taking you in a street car.". "You dear! Forgive me if 1 gave-you pain in saying what I did-" Chicag Record-Herald. The 'classified ad columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. t , it I -7v . ' fey (9) )i "a I : te V ' "i uji" MANY FEATURES AT TEACHERS' L County School Superintendent T. J. Gary has completed all plans for the three weeks' summer training school that Clackamas county teachers will take part in at Gladstone park, com mencing June 17. Saveral novel feat ures have been added to those already arranged, and it is believed that the first gathering of this kind will not only be a great success in itself, but will accomplish a great deal for the instructors. There will be a special course of lectures upon social hygiene, in which President Foster, of Reed Institute, Prof. Coleman, Dr. White of the stae health department, Dr. Williamson and Dr. House will deliver talks. Mr. Harrington, of the state juven ile fair board, has also been secured to deliver a lecture upon practical school work, and Btereopticon lec tures will be given by Dr. Clyde Mount upon the care of teeth and up on dental diseases common to school children; and by Mrs. Bigelow, of the U. S. Department of Agriculture on "Child Play." Two lectures will al so be given by Editor Jones, of th-9 Oregon Teachers' Monthly, and How ard James will give talks on methods of teaching geography and arithme tic. Misses Edna Deyo, Edith Carr and Lena Ulen have been secured to con- j duct the model school during . the tnree weeKs, and 33 pupils from above the second grade in the Gladstone school have volunteered to attend. This school will be a demonstration of the work of teaching eight grades in one room in modern rural schools. It has been arranged, to have the three Saturday of the session ob served as "special days,' when lec tures and entertainments will be giv en. Arrangements have also been mad& J or a certain amount of " play and recreation during the school, and there will be" baseball games, a tennis tournament and other sports for the teachers in attendance. - MINNIE IS VERY SORRY" Minnie Stewart, of Ardenwald, ar rested on complaint of Augusta Baun, of the same place, appeared in Jus tice Sievers' court Wednesday to an swer to a charge of assault. Ahe con flicting parties had settled their dif ferences out of court, and the case was dismissed. After Minnie was sure of this she turned to Augusta, and said : "Well, now that this case has been dismissed there is just one thing I want to say, and that is that I'm sor ry I didnt smash you hardef when I had the chance." CHANCE TO GET A BIKE Chief of Police Shaw has in his pos session a perfectly good bicycle that one of his patrolmen found some days ago lying upon the river bank. Wheth er the owner of the machine leaped to a watery grave or not the chief does not know but If the owner is still alive he may have the" machine by proving his property.' Such proof, the chief says, must' consist in giv ing the number of the machine, the name of its make and a description of its coloring and other peculiarit- Wedding in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 4. Six- lieutenants of the United States army served as ushers ot the wedding today of Miss Carlotta Damon La Lanne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. La Lanne, and "Lieutenant Lindsay C. Herkness, U. S. A. e Portland Railway, Light & Power Company Beaver Building, Main Street BERRY SEASON Oil !N Warm weather of the past several days has done wonders for the straw berry crop, and has knocked the bot tom out of market prices. Crates of the lucious summer fruit are being quoted at a dollar less than earlier m the week, and the retail market is tumbling like the stock exchange in a panic. Berries that sold for 20 cents a box Saturday were reduced to two boxes for a quarter Monday, and Wednesday were selling at ten cents flat, with prognostications by local stores that they would be sell ing at six for two-bits by next Mon day, if not sooner. Efforts of Port land newspapers to bull the market by printing allegations that there is but a 40 per cent crop In this section are much resented by local dealers and by growers. Eggs are quoted in Portland at cents and up. Locally the best eggs may be bought at retail for 20 cents a dozen, either from stores or from poultry men. At this, rate there is not much profit for the middleman. California raspberriesv are making t"ieir appearance in the wholesale markets, but are not of extra quality. Gooseberries are becoming more plentiful daily, and are increasing in size. Present offerings are of good quality. Asparagus is now in its prime, and is reasonable in price. Wholesalsrs are paying from 60 to 90 cents a doz en bunches, and the "grass" is find ing a ready sale. Local prices are about the same as Portland. Local lettuce is making its appear ance in the stores, and is in fair con dition. The heads are not closely packed, however, and there is less to each head than appears from the size. Butter is holding at the same prices prevalent for the past several weeks, creameries taking care of the surplus by storage. At that, however, the price is not high. Livestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and 8c; cows 6 and 7 c, bulls i to 6c. MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; lambs 6 to 6 l-2c. VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed, according to grade. WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 16c lb. PORK 9 1-2 and 10c. POULTRY (buying) Hens 12 to 13c. Stags slow at 10c; old roos ters ,8c ; ; broilers 22c. FrulU APPLES-50c and $1, DRIED FRUITS-(Buying), Prunea on basis 4 for 35 to 40c. VEGETABLES ' ONIONS $1.00 sack. POTATOES About 25 to 30c f. o. b. shiping points per hundred; again stageant and not moving at any price. Butter, Egga. BUTTER (I tying). Ordinary coun try butter 20 to 25c; fancy cream- EGGS Oregon ranch case count 16c; Oregon ranch candled 18c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are aa follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 9c to 10c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.60 each. Mohair 31c. WOOL 15 to 16c. FEED (Selling) Shorts $29; bran $27; process barley, $30.50 to $31.50. per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to $5. OATS $28.50; wheat, 93 cents oil meal selling $38.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. rnnu rA rilKlY! ' Ls NJ IU1WI f 1 The Superiority of ElectricToast to the charred, or brittle, or soggy kind made in the tedious old-fashioned way, is relatively the same as the superiority of grilled steak to fried steak. For one-tenth of a cent a slice the General Electric Radiant Toaster makes Perfect Toast-faster than you can eat it. It is Perfect Toast because the radiant heat forces the necessary chemical change in the bread. This insures delicious golden Toast that fairly melt in your mouth. Vou can operate the General Electric Radiant Toaster on the finest damask table cloth. Its neat porcelain base and cheerful glowing coils add gra.ee and charm to any table. This little toaster is oh display at oui store in the Bea ; ver Building on Main Street ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE The Anttjtfntfronwder dhaken isto the thoet-Tke Standard Kaaf cdy toe the feet lor a quarter dads-Mark. tTcrjrwbere, 25c Sample FKEB. Aaoms. Alien 9. viimwM. fiYt - - - IkellaiwfesHllfesECs la Fall. Whole corn $31.00. HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 tad $9; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix ed $9 to $11; valley timothy $12 to $13; selUng alfalfa $13.50 to $17; Ida ho and Eastern Oregon timothy sell ing $20.60 to $23. A GOOD INVESTMENT There is no better investment than a fifty-cent piece in a bottle of Meri tol White Liniment. Muscular anl rheumatic pains, swellings, lameness and soreness of the muscles are promptly relieved. Meritol White Liniment is especially recommended as a general pain killer of unusual merit. Jones Drug Co. Opening of University WASHINGTON, D. C, June 4 The American University, planned years ago by Methodist Episcopal ed ucators, became an accomplished faot today when the doors of the institu tion were thrown open for the first time for the reception of students. The university buildings were com pleted some years ago on the out skirts of this city, but the opening was delayed until funds sufficent for the maintenance of the institution were raised. The universiy will con trol a series of lectures, and will support a comprehensive system .of fellowships. American Wed Abroad MUNICH, June 4. Mtss Margaret Sloane, daughter of 'Professor Wil liam M. Sloane of .Columbia Univer sity, who has been officiating as Roosevelt professor at the University of Berlin, was married here today to Benson Bennett Sloan, a . prominent New York stock broker. The cere mony -was performed in the American chapel of St. Gscrge's and was fol lowed by a breakfast at the Hotel jsayriBcaer xioi. BRIDGE CLCB MEETS The Auction Bridge club met at the home of Mrs. Theodore Osmund Wed nesday afternoon. The prizes were won by, Mrs. Neita Barlow Lawrence and Mrs. J. J Tobin. There were seven tables played. Decorations were roses of the season. Dotsnr An A YOURnCaniAVllLi. It WILL NOT if 70a tmlLm KRAUZE'S HEADACHE CAPSULES They will care any kind of Headache, no matter what the cause. Perfectly HanaieM. Pric 35 Cnta JTtRMAHUCETTHFG. CO,Des Moime,Ia. I mmmmmt for sale by THE JONES DRUG CO. y We have a large stock of these remedies, just fresh from the labor atory. i f